Prevalence of Malaria Infection in Pregnant Women Attending Antenatal Clinics in Southern Senegal

Author:

Diouf Marie Pierre12,Kande Safietou1,Oboh Mary Aigbiremo3,Manga Isaac Akhénaton2,Tairou Fassiatou2,Seck Amadou1,Diallo Abdoulaye1,Lo Aminata Colle2,Sow Doudou24,Sylla Khadime2,Ndiaye Magatte2,Tine Roger Clément2,Faye Babacar2,Merle Corinne5,Amambua-Ngwa Alfred6,Miligan Paul7,Ndiaye Jean-Louis Abdourahim1

Affiliation:

1. Service Parasitologie Mycologie, UFR Santé Thiès, Senegal;

2. Service Parasitologie Mycologie, Cheikh Anta Diop University, Dakar, Senegal;

3. Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, New York;

4. Gaston Berger University, Saint Louis, Senegal;

5. World Health Organization Tropical Disease Research, Geneva, Switzerland;

6. Medical Research Council Unit, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Serekunda, The Gambia;

7. London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom

Abstract

ABSTRACT. Despite marked progress in Senegal, three regions in the southeast part continue to have a high burden of malaria, but there have been no recent studies assessing the prevalence of malaria associated with pregnancy. This study aimed to determine the prevalence of malaria infection in pregnant women attending antenatal clinics in Senegal. During the malaria transmission season of 2019, pregnant women attending 11 health care facilities for a scheduled visit and those presenting unwell with signs of malaria were invited to participate in a malaria screening study. A finger prick blood sample was taken for malaria diagnosis by rapid diagnosis test (RDT) and polymerase chain reaction (PCR). A total of 877 pregnant women were enrolled, 787 for a scheduled antenatal consultation and 90 for an unscheduled consultation with signs of malaria. The prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum among the first group was 48% by PCR and 20% by RDT, and that among the second group was 86% by PCR and 83% by RDT. RDT sensitivity in capturing asymptomatic, PCR-positive infections was 9.2% but ranged from 83% to 94% among febrile women. The prevalence of infection by PCR in women who reported having received at least three doses of sulfadoxine pyrimethamine (SP) was 41.9% compared with 58.9% in women who reported they had not received any SP doses (prevalence ratio adjusted for gravidity and gestational age, 0.54; 95% CI, 0.41–0.73). The burden of P. falciparum infections remains high among pregnant women, the majority of which are not captured by RDT. More effective measures to prevent malaria infection in pregnancy are needed.

Publisher

American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

Reference35 articles.

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2. A systematic review of the impact of malaria prevention in pregnancy on low birth weight and maternal anemia;McClure,2013

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